The people who brought us the Women's March are about to bring us a Day Without Women. A little more than two weeks after the wildly successful post–Inauguration Day protest that saw hundreds of thousands of women and supporters of women descend on Washington, D.C. (and millions of others gathering at nearly 700 sister marches held all over the world), the organizers of the Women's March movement have announced that they're planning yet another landmark demonstration.

A graphic posted to the official Women's March Twitter account has unveiled plans for the follow-up, this time a "general strike." No details of the strike have been revealed at this point, other than the fact that it seems to be titled "A Day Without Women." The announcement also notes that the date for the strike has yet to be announced. The caption accompanying the image posted to Twitter, Facebook and Instagram reads, "The will of the people will stand." See the announcement for yourself below:

The Women's March on Washington January 21 reportedly boasted a turnout three times as large as the crowd that gathered in the nation's capital for President Donald Trump's inauguration. And that estimate doesn't even count the nearly 5 million marchers who attended protests around the world.

Following the Women's March, organizers launched the 10 Actions for the First 100 Days campaign, with the catchprase, "First we marched, now we huddle." The campaign calls for people to gather in small groups and take steps to make their voices heard by government representatives and participate in advocacy for important causes related to gender equality.

Stay tuned for more details about "A Day Without Women" as they become available.